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    Marlon Brando (Penguin Lives)

    Marlon Brando (Penguin Lives)Author: Patricia Bosworth
    Publisher: Viking Adult
    Category: Book

    List Price: $21.95
    Buy Used: $0.01
    as of 2/9/2010 21:55 EST details
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    New (17) Used (68) Collectible (3) from $0.01

    Seller: Words of Enchantment
    Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 7 reviews
    Sales Rank: 809584

    Media: Hardcover
    Edition: First Edition
    Pages: 240
    Number Of Items: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
    Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.7 x 0.9

    ISBN: 0670882364
    Dewey Decimal Number: 791.43028092
    EAN: 9780670882366
    ASIN: 0670882364

    Publication Date: September 10, 2001
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Also Available In:

      • Hardcover - Marlon Brando (Lives)
      • Audio Cassette - Marlon Brando
      • Hardcover - Marlon Brando
      • Paperback - Marlon Brando
      • Hardcover - Marlon Brando
      • Paperback - Marlon Brando (Camden)
      • Audio Cassette - Marlon Brando

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    Editorial Reviews:

    Amazon.com Review
    There have been many biographies of Marlon Brando, but Patricia Bosworth's succinct portrait, a worthy addition to the always cogent Penguin Lives series, will appeal to those more interested in the legendary performances that revolutionized American acting than in his offscreen shenanigans. A longtime member of the Actors Studio, Bosworth is especially well equipped to elucidate the introspective, emotionally charged acting style that electrified Broadway audiences in A Streetcar Named Desire, which opened in 1947 when Brando was only 23. Much of the material is familiar, but Bosworth often offers intriguing sidelights, such as the speculation that he modeled aspects of Stanley Kowalski on the play's driven, womanizing director, Elia Kazan. It's also interesting to learn that the actor he most admires is Paul Muni, who vanished into each characterization and had no "image" to plague him as Brando did after his star-making turns in The Wild One and On the Waterfront made him the quintessential 1950s rebel. (Bosworth suggests that The Godfather appealed to Brando because in the part of Don Corleone he could "hide completely" as Muni had done.) As in her biographies of Montgomery Clift and Diane Arbus, Bosworth examines with sympathy her subject's psychological difficulties, particularly his relationships with his alcoholic mother and brutal father; she skates lightly over later troubles like the murder trial of son Christian and suicide of daughter Cheyenne. The book essentially closes with Brando's early-'70s triumphs in The Godfather and Last Tango in Paris; the author frankly admits she's "still trying to figure out why this singular artist lost his way after [those] two great performances." Bosworth's appreciative account renews our dismay that this brilliant actor who so despises his profession couldn't be bothered to give more such performances. --Wendy Smith

    Product Description
    Patricia Bosworth is an acclaimed biographer whose classic work on the life of Montgomery Clift was praised by Newsweek as "the best film star biography in years." Her firsthand knowledge of the entertainment industry infuses her writing with an intimacy and vividness The Washington Post Book World calls "extraordinary." In Marlon Brando, she evokes the magnetic sexuality, passion, and vulnerability of the icon and the man.

    Following its subject from the moody Oklahoma teenager to the Method-trained star to the eccentric recluse of his later years, Marlon Brando offers a penetrating look at the actor's evolving persona: the volcanic Stanley Kowalski in A Streetcar Named Desire, the sensitive rebel in The Wild Ones, the iconic Don Corleone in The Godfather. Bosworth probes Brando's alcoholic parents' influence on his acting, his decades of psychoanalysis, and his tumultuous personal relationships. Here, from rebellious unknown to reluctant idol to falling star, is the complex charismatic genius who changed the face of acting.



    Customer Reviews:
    Showing reviews 1-5 of 7



    4 out of 5 stars A Page Turner...   July 30, 2007
    LadyWriter214 (California, USA)
    3 out of 3 found this review helpful

    "Marlon Brando" by Patricia Bosworth is a well written and intriguing biography. I enjoyed reading it very much and I enjoyed that it was fairly nicely balanced and included details of Marlon's on-screen and off-screen life.

    I think Marlon took some serious and unfair hits in his life - personally, with tragedies that befell him and his family and, professionally, as a result of other peoples' misjudgments regarding his having taken stands for important humanitarian causes and against social injustices. He was a human being that cared deeply for others and one who tried to put that caring into positive action. He was also the greatest actor ever to grace the stage or screen.

    It is sad to me that Marlon was alone at the end of his life. He had his children who loved him and cared about him, but he reportedly lived alone. I have always wondered if the rejections he suffered throughout his life marked him so deeply that he felt unworthy and, thus, rejected the idea of having someone there loving him, caring for him, and supporting him physically, emotionally, and spiritually through his illness at a time in his life when things may not have been as "pretty" as they once were. He WAS worthy, despite his possibly not knowing that at the time.

    I appreciate Marlon's statement that people who are deeply sensitive are more easily brutalized than most. I think this is very true. Pain is felt much more deeply and is more deeply internalized by those who are the most sensitive. It can leave one feeling unworthy and untrusting and all of the money and fame in the world cannot repair the damage. It is a spiritual thing, not a thing of earthly possessions or material accomplishments.

    Marlon was a sensitive soul who needed to be cared for differently than he was during so many parts of his life.



    4 out of 5 stars Yet Another Brando Bio   July 13, 2002
    H. F. Corbin (ATLANTA, GA USA)
    4 out of 8 found this review helpful

    Hey, I like Brando tremendously as an actor and have read his biographies for years. I particularly like his autobiography SONGS MY MOTHER TAUGHT ME. There is certainly nothing wrong with Ms. Bosworth as a writer. The book is an interesting, easy read. My objection is not to Ms. Bosworth but to the constraints of the format of Penguin LIVES. It appears to me that a writer cannot do an in-depth examination of someone's life in such a short book-- assuming that anyone will ever get much into the inner recesses of Mr. Brando's mind. Perhaps his private life should remain private. For instance, do I need to know that he has taken the drug librium for years? I think not. Additionally I would have liked to see footnotes. Ms. Bosworth makes a lot of statements about Brando with not the slightest hint of where shes got such information. Granted, she does list other biographies she consulted as well as the people she interviewed for writing this bio. I assume that extensive footnotes would have make the book too long. Having said all that, I am now in need of a Brando film festival, having finished the book. Ms. Bosworth made me want to revisit the Brando movies I've seen and see others for the first time.


    5 out of 5 stars Bravo Brando!   June 2, 2002
    5 out of 5 found this review helpful

    A vivid portrait of the man and his acting genius. Bosworth does a bang up job depicting his life and the development of his enormous talent. He is one of the world's greatest artists and we get a clear unencumbered picture of the man and his life in clear, practical, prose. Really fascinating.


    5 out of 5 stars Really helped me understand a creative genius better...   November 14, 2001
    7 out of 8 found this review helpful

    This was a revelation - a wonderful, wonderful biography
    for which I am extremely grateful. It's touching, deft, and
    I liked the fact that she focused on Brando the artist. I'm
    sure he would like this book - I would, if I were him. It is
    not at all condescending nor overly fawning.

    I really felt for the man and the brilliant communicator of emotions, whose movies have always taught me about being an artist myself. Now I want to go and see all his films again. especially Mutiny on the Bounty. And my heart goes out to Marlon Brando, the neglected child of alcoholics, the big-hearted giver, the best friend of some very special people, including Wally Cox and Stella Adler,
    the co-dependent son and father, the compulsive overeater who really should join O.A.

    The book zips along, thanks to Bosworth's fine writing. And I'd like to say that it's a lesson in the efficacy of the brief biography. I'm so sick of trying to wade through tomes that tell you about everything from the kindergarten teacher who inspired the star to his toenail clipping habits. This little
    book synthesized a complex life in a very dignified way.
    Hats off to Patricia Bosworth.


    5 out of 5 stars Excellent short biography   October 24, 2001
    John Hechtlinger (Fort Lee, NJ United States)
    9 out of 10 found this review helpful

    This was a very quick and engrossing read. If, like myself, you know very little about Brando's life, this book will be a revelation. Brando is one of the most fascinating personalities of our time. This book does a good job of shedding light on the forces that helped shape his personality. His alcoholic mother and philandering and bullying father created a depressing family environment. It seems that he could never quite break free from their destructive influence despite years of psychotherapy. A sad story.

    Showing reviews 1-5 of 7


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